Sure thing. A long-term trend in medicine has been to reduce LDL scores in patients. Nowadays, we're trying to increase HDL scores as well. You're up.
How can the second law of thermodynamics be formulated for an open system?
The second law is for an isolated system, where it will tend to maximum entropy. I presume by 'open' system you mean one that is not isolated?
In that case, the second law if fairly meaningless - it probably implies that energy changes over the system boundary can cause entropy to decrease.
I guess you could say that the second law for an open system is actually the third law.... entropy tends to zero at 0 K.
I'm not sure what you're driving at here. Regarding open vs closed system, I still assert that for an open system, the concept of entropy is rather meaningless; to decrease entropy, you need a change in energy, which is either heat or work. Yes, this can be a localised change within a system (which could be described as a change within an 'open' system), but in that case it is more useful to simply redraw the boundaries around the affected area to show the energy transfer across the boundary.
The 'open system violation of the second law' is an argument that people like to use to obfuscate that evolution somehow breaks the second law. Is that the answer you're looking for?
I would suggest that the true second-law representation for an open system is simply that you can't decrease entropy without a localised change in heat or work.
There are many equivalent formulations of the second law - one is for example that it's impossible to completely convert heat into work - that should be perfectly valid in an open system.
Mass, spin and axis of spin? (Complete guess)
Parameter guesses: Charge? Energy?
Shape guesses: Sphere? Torus? Line? Point? Two balloons tied together? Funnel? Vagina-shaped?